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Nicolás Maduro and Xi Jinping during the visit of the Venezuelan President to Beijing on September 15, 2015. Photo: @NicolasMaduro, some rights reserved.

Two weeks ago
the Secretary General of the Organization of American States, Luis Almagro,
surprised the world with his candid remarks on the possibility of a military
intervention to stop the ongoing humanitarian and political crisis in
Venezuela.

Speaking from the Colombian city of Cucuta, located at the border
with Venezuela, the Secretary General stated:
“With respect to a military intervention to overthrow Nicolas Maduro’s regime,
I don’t think any option should be ruled out.” He later clarified
that he was not referring to armed attacks, aggression, or illegitimate
interventions, but only actions in accordance with the principles of
international law.

A year ago, democraciaAbierta’s author Matt Ferchen, an Associate Professor at the Tsinguah University in
Beijing, published an insightful
analysis of the Venezuelan crisis titled “Can China help fix Venezuela?”. Amidst
a political and financial crisis that has resulted in massive migrations of
Venezuelans throughout the Americas – the kind of migration that in the past
has prompted military interventions elsewhere, such as Vietnam’s invasion of
Cambodia in 1978 – Ferchen tried to flag the importance of a player that is usually
neglected when discussing the problem of Venezuela: China.

During the last years China has provided Venezuela with over $60 billion in oil-backed loans, and tens of billions more in other investment deals.

Hence, he remarked:
“Given how little traction regional and other multilateral efforts to engage
with Venezuela have gained, and in light of China’s massive loans-for-oil ties
to Venezuela, Beijing’s role must be more carefully understood and scrutinised.”

Indeed, during
the last years China has provided Venezuela with over $60 billion in oil-backed
loans, and tens of billions more in other investment deals, the latest of which
were secured by Nicolás Maduro during his last visit to Beijing on September 15th, on
the very same day Secretary General Almagro was delivering
his warning to the Venezuelan authorities. Ferchen concludes that “Chinese lending
has saddled Venezuela with unsustainable debt and oil export burdens.” What
will happen if, and when, Venezuela can’t fulfill its financial commitments
with China?

116 years ago,
in 1902, Venezuela found itself in a similar plight. Outstanding debts with the
British and the German Empires led these two colossi to implement a naval
blockade of the Caribbean country. The only thing that stood in the way of the
European landing forces and the coasts of Venezuela was the adamant opposition
of the United States Government, at the time led by Theodore Roosevelt.

According
to what would later become known as the “Roosevelt Corollary” to the Monroe
Doctrine, Roosevelt declared in his 1904
State of the Union speech that “in the Western Hemisphere the adherence of
the United States to the Monroe Doctrine may force the United States, however
reluctantly, in flagrant cases of such wrongdoing or impotence, to the exercise
of an international police power.”

Today, even if
Venezuela went into default, the scenario described would be hardly possible.
Not only has this sort of gunboat diplomacy been abandoned after the
criminalization of aggressive war during the 20th century, but the
U.S. has also completely deserted its role as the leader of the Western
Hemisphere it paid so dearly to build for the last 200 years, President Obama’s
maneuver to reestablish relations with Cuba being but an Indian Summer.

For the past decades China has secured several strategic beachheads throughout the Americas.

Consequently, for the past decades China has secured several strategic
beachheads throughout the Americas, including among others, in Nicaragua where
a new canal is being built to put an end to over a century of American hegemony
over the passage between the Atlantic and the Pacific; in Chile and Peru, where
Chinese presence in the mining industry is spreading fast; and, of course, in
Venezuela, with the loans-for-oil policy that has kept a dying regime breathing
for a few more years.

This growing presence in the Western Hemisphere is but a
chapter of the Chinese long-term plan for global hegemony, in addition to
widespread investment in the African continent, and to the ambitious “One
Belt One Road” plan to control international trade routes between Asia and
Europe.

The possibility of China intervening militarily in Venezuela as its creditor seems at present far-fetched.

And yet, the
possibility of China intervening militarily in Venezuela as its creditor seems
at present far-fetched, due to China’s longstanding commitment to the –
extremely practical – principle of non-intervention in the domestic affairs of
other nations, as well as for strategic reasons. According to Ferchen, at least
in the short-run, “China may view the chaotic status quo in Venezuela as a
safer bet for having its loans repaid and ensuring future oil shipments—not to
mention preserving its close state-to-state ties—than a transition to a
different, possibly opposition-led government.”

Further, any
military option must be scrutinized with the utmost care on account of the
prohibition of the use of force that is enshrined under article 2(4) of the UN
Charter. What was of old known as a “humanitarian intervention” today has been
refurbished by the international community as the doctrine of the “responsibility
to protect” (Both notions are ultimately tributaries of the Just War
tradition, which sets forth certain criteria that must be met before resorting
to armed force: just
cause, legitimate authority, right intention, last resort, and proportionality).

Applying these
criteria to Venezuela, we obtain that several of them are not met as yet. To be
sure, the situation is dire, and crimes against humanity have been committed by
the Venezuelan government, as denounced
recently by the OAS. This already amounts to a just cause according to
international standards.

Yet, the other criteria seem shaky at best. Even with
Almagro’s vocal opposition to Maduro’s regime, it would be rush to conclude
that the OAS – or any other international organization for that matter – has given
its consent as a legitimate authority for the use of military force in
Venezuela. Further, a right intention can be only ascertained ex post facto.

The situation is dire, and crimes against humanity have been committed by the Venezuelan government. This already amounts to a just cause according to international standards. Yet, the other criteria seem shaky at best.

The most
problematic requirements are those of last resort and proportionality, and both
have to do with China’s clout over Maduro. In terms of proportionality, the
costs of intervening militarily in a country that is an ally of China without
the latter’s consent could prove catastrophic in the long-term, and largely
exceed the benefits that could be reaped.

Regarding last resort, there is still
a possibility that China’s financial might could influence its debtor into
implementing the necessary reforms to stop the political turmoil in the country
and the migration crisis in the region.

At the end of
the day, the solution to the crisis in Venezuela lies with China. Just as
Russia could – but apparently won’t – exert the necessary pressure for the
Assad regime to stop the bloodshed
in Syria, the key to ending the humanitarian and political crisis in
Venezuela is held by the Chinese.

Thus, Ferchen concludes that “Beijing, in
short, must make a more responsible approach to its relations with Caracas,” as
one of the first tests China has to face to earn the title of a true world
leader. A good first step would be to cut Maduro off until he gives real
guarantees, not only of financial soundness, but of good governance as well.

Just
as the 1902 crisis went down in history as one of the moments when U.S.
hegemony in the Western Hemisphere was put to the test and triumphed, the 2018
Venezuelan crisis could prove a valuable opportunity for China to define the
kind of world leadership it wants to conduct in the 21st century.

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